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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE’ 4, 1980 TIGER AND RED BOTH Wyatt, Kolp, Teachout, Clark HATTON’S STRONG NINE MEETS UNION GIANTS HERE SUNDAY COME TO RESCUE OF Bismarck High Graduates Eight State Champions | ; BATTERED STARTERS ‘Chicago Cub Holds Boston Braves to Seven Hits as Mates Win 15 to 2 CLARK GETS FINAL SCORE Babe Ruth Gets No. 17 and Yanks Hit 19 Times to De- feat Chicox 13-7. By HUGH S. FULLERTON, JR. Press Sports Writer) Whitlow Wyatt, a big Georgian whom Detroit acquired from the Evansville club of the Three Eye league, has turned out to be one of the season’s best finishers in the box. Wyatt probably has done more good pitching than any other Detroiter. Time and again he has saved the Tigers from defeat or has kept games already lost from becoming routs, Such was the case yesterday as the ‘Tigers dropped an 8 to 4 decision to ‘Washington. The Senators had at- tacked Whitehill and Sullivan for seven runs in the second inning be- fore Wyatt appeared, but he stopped them with three hits and a single counter in the next seven innings. KOLP RESCUES BENTON Ray Kolp of Cincinnati turned in almost the duplicate of Wyatt’s per- formance. Kolp came to rescue Larry Benton from the brutal assaults of his former teammates, the New York Giants, and stopped them with two hits. The Giants won the game, 9 tol. Another rookie, Art Teachout of the Chicago Cubs, led the way among the few pitchers who completed the games they started. He held the Boston Braves to seven hits while his mates attacked Grimes and Cooney for 17 clouts and a 15 to 2 victory. Bill Clark had to hit as well as ning and scored the run that brought SL il dilate over Pitts- burg! For sheer slugging, the 11 to 10 tri- umph of the St. Louis Cardinals over the Phillies took the prize for a day that saw 196 hits made ‘n eight ite | reli pitched Cleveland to an 8 to ; EDWARD SPRIGGS THEODORE MEINHOVER JOHN O'HARE EARL HOFFMAN RUSSEL ENGE WALLACE GREEN CHARLES WHITTEY FRA! Pictured above are eight graduates of Bismarck high school in the class of 1930 who served as vertebrae in the backbone of an athletic system which brought their school five major state championships in the last two years, the last four being consecutive. In the fall of 1928 Bismarck high school won the state football championship. In the basketball drive immediately following the Demons were runners-up for the state title, losing to Valley City. In the spring of 1929, Bismarck won the state track and field championship. Continuing their stride during the school year just closed, the Demons won the state football, basketball and track and field champion- ships. The graduates participated in the following sports: Spriggs—football, basketball, and track; Hoffman— football and basketball; Meinhover—football, basketball and track; O'Hare—football. basketball, and track; Enge— football; Green—football and track; Whittey, football; Smith—football' and basketball. Schmeling Will Have Finger Operation Three Homers Hit |oums Hearyweignes thir Cards Slug Way to In American Loop| "sine soyroos | Win Over Phillies Since Boyhood Foxx and Miller of Athletics and Tail-Enders Nosed Out 11 to 10; Ruth Send Balls Out Giants and Cubs Are Over Fences Victorious Endicott, N. ¥., June 4—(F)—Max Schmeling unintentionally threw a scare into the fight writers assembled to peer at his workouts. He extended his right hand to a scribbler visiting at his cottage and for the first time it was noticed Max’s| philadelphia, June 3.—-(#)—St. Louis thisd ‘finger on is Tight han Wa ootorassetl fois, slihougn: oven Schmeling’s right hand is his best GOS a Oi soak 1 IAT HEAT OMe tinseligatiesialtieined)|“" tenes i, Cleveland, June 4.—@)—Wes oS triumph over Boston yesterday 000 000 0: Boston .. 1. 0 000 401 03$— 8 17 0 im and Berry; Ferrell and L. Sewell. FOXX, MILLER CLOUT St. Louis.— Foxx and Miller hit homers” as the Athletics beat the) invited Dr. W. G. Fralick, New York |... GHANTS POUND BERTON 44 ‘Oo 1. New ¥ — e Gian ounde: Brees nis... 000000 211— 4 9 0| Surgeon who has operated on the in-|rarry Benton in three’ innings and 70 ccf’ | ured hands of many fighters, to visit him Thursday. Immediately it be- came obvious Max was suffering from a broken digit. ‘The -German heavyweight got a chuckle out of the situation as he made his easy explanation. The fin- ger, never before noticed by news- beat Cincinn Cincinnati . New York Benton, St. Louis .. 000 001 000— Grove, Quinn and Cochrane; man and Manion. SENATORS WIN OPENER Detroit.—Washington defeated De- troit 8 to 4 in a series open: Washington . 070 000 010— 8 10 0 Detroit .. 100 001 200— 4 9 0 Liska, Braxton and Spencer; White- 0.1, 100 000 000— 1 12 1 242 000 10¢— 9 12 1 and Gooch; Hubbel Kolp and Hogan. CUBS WIN SIXTH Boston,—The Cubs won their sixth Braves, 15 to 2. 000 058 232—15 17 0 3-72 000 01 Hartnett; Grimes, straight from the Chicago Boston !in Minnesota. Lefty Teie, who pitch- | 1) June 11, at Brandon, Manitoba; June hill, Sullivan, Wyatt and Hargrave. 7 His seven. BABE CLOUTS No. Chicago. Babe ‘Ruth hit teenth homer as the Yanks downed Chicago 13 to 7. 140 181 021—13 19 1 100 001 303— 7 11 3 Teach Cooney and Spohrer, Cronin. CLARK DOUBLES TO WIN Brooklyn.— Clark doubled in the ninth to give Brooklyn a 6 to 5 vice tory over Pittsburgh. Babe Herman hit his thirteenth homer of the year. Pittsburgh ++ 020 100 011— 5 8 0 paper men, was infected with blood poisoning. when Schmeling was eight years old and 14 minor operations left the digit stiffened and bent over. He plans to play golf with Dr. Fralick, who once operated upon a broken (By The Associated Press) ‘Wally Gilbert, Robins —His single in the 9th scored Clark with run that beat Pirates. Jimmy Foxx and Bing Miller, Ath) letics—Hit successive home runs in seventh to aid A’s beat Browns. ‘Wes Ferrell, Indians—Won eighth game of season, holding Red Sox to three runs as Yanks downed White Box. Charley Grimm, Cubs—Hit Braves’ pitching for two doubles and two} singles as Cubs won easily. ‘Old Pete’ Alexander Is Released by Phils Philadelphit Cleveland Al June 3.—(%)—Grover ander, veteran pitcher home town is St. Paul, Nebraska. “We are sorry to let Alex go,” said ipgras rgreaves, Bengough; . Lyons, Henry and Riddle. bone in his left thumb. Brooklyn ........ 202 001 001—'6 11 4 o Kremer, Spencer and. Hemsley; —_—— Ae DRE SY GY Oates Clark and Lopez. ’ ; Last Ni Von Porat Refuses to : |, Fights Last Night _| Meet Young Stribling (By the Associated Press.) cl — Bud Taylor, ‘Terre Haute, Ind. knocked out Jackie Johnaon, Toronto (2). New York—Maxie Rosenbloom, inted George Chicago, June 4.—(7)—Otto von Porat, the big Norse annihilator, has refused to .go through with his con- templated 10 round match with Young Stribling. The match was billed for the Chi- cago stadium, June 16, but Von Porat suddenly informed the stadium matchmaker he did not care to. mect Stribling at this time. Alabama Poly (Auburn) plans a $100,000 football stadium. om . Ub (By the Associated Press.) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Herman (Robins), .425. RunsHerman and Frederick (Rob- m8), Home runs—Wilson (Cubs), 16. Stolen bases—Cuyler (Cubs), 13. AMERICAN LEAGU: Batting—Rice (Senators), .402. Runs—Ruth (Yankees), 50. Home runs—Ruth (Yankees), 17. _ | Stolen bases—Rice (Senators), 10. ao). Frankie Camp- 2 ‘Ineo, knoc! out @). D.—Tom Pruitt, GILKERSON'S OUTEIT FACING PILOT MOUND MACHINE THIS WEEK Colored Team Headquartering in Bismarck Has 14Games | in Near Future TEIE HURLS FOR VISITORS! Opening Doubleheader Here Is Scheduled to Begin Prompt- ly at 2-0'Clock P.M. Having been foiled in their attempt last Sunday to open their season in Bismarck because of a strong wind- storm, Manager Bob Gilkerson and his Union Giants will meet the strong Hatton baseball nine in a double- header here next Sunday in their first games in the Capital City. The Giants left Bismarck Monday for Pilot Mound, Manitoba, where they were to play last night and this evening. Gilkerson expected to play exhibition games tomorrow and Fri- day and return\to Bismarck Satur- a he announced when he left Mon- ry. Hatton comes here with its strong- est lineup in history for the double- header Sunday, which begins at 2 p. m. Melquist, Erskine, Minn., receiver, is included in the lineup. It is said of the Minnesotan that he carries dy- namite in his bludgeon; he has played. with several semi-professional teams ed a one-hit shutout game in the 1928 | tournament here, and Simley will do/ the hurling for the visitors. A. Tele, is expected to cover first sack. Other | infielders include Johnson, who play- | ed with the Bismarck Grays last sum- | mer; George Lee, former Concordia! athlete; Ellingson and Ostrem; and’ Brustad of Leeds. Third Tele To Play Two outfield positions will be; handled by Hegg and J. Teie, the lat-| ter now playing with the strong Luth- er college nine. The third outfielder si be selected from among the regu- Hatton meets the star Jamestown team at Jamestown today and tomor- row. Next week the club leaves for Canada for a solid week of play. Fourteen games in the immediate future had been booked by Gilkerson and his Giants shortly before they left here Monday. The schedule fol- lows: June 10, at Roland, Manitoba; 12, at Pilot Mound, Manitoba; June 13 and 14, at Winnipeg; June 15, at Grafton; June 26, at Rugby; June 27, at Williston; June 28, at Minot; June 29, Jamestown at™Bismarck; July 2 and 3, Jamestown at Mandan; July 4 (1:30 p. m.), at Minot; July 4 (6:30 p. m.), at Larimore; July 5, at Bot- tineau; and July 6, at Kenmare. Has Strongest Lineup Gilkerson has gathered a strong team about him this season. Last year the team won 122, lost 26, and tied four games. Haley, third base- man, got 41 home runs. The Giants won five tournaments in Canada and defeated the Omaha club of the ‘Western League at Arlington, Neb., 10:to 1 for $1,000 purse money in a tournament last September. Included in the lineup are Cole- Turn in Good Pitching Performances Dorothy Pardue and Mrs. H. S. Clarke Are Favored Finalists rienti, and Gamez are Cubans from Havana. Morris, Torrienti, McNair, and Whitworth all have played with Rube Foster's American Giants while Smaulding' and Dwight are former members of the Kansas City Mon- archs of the colored league. NATIONAL LEAGUE Club— Ww. Brooklyn Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh . New York Boston . Cincinna’ Philadelphia a AMERICS Philadelphia .. Washington Cleveland New York 13 24 LEAGUE WwW. OL 2409 : Blenheim Is Victor s 1405 Chicago 1400 Boston . AMERICAN ASSOCIATION tub— WwW. L. clu Louisville St. Paul... Columbus Toledo ... Indianapoli Kansas City Milwaukee’. Minneapolis POWER AND LIGHT INGREASES LEAD Diamondball Leaders Win Fifth Straight; Telephones Lose Fifth Straight 13S om rotstenensenene Power and Light increased its lead and the Gamble and Capital Laundry Bismarck Diamondball league. Power and Light won its fifth con- eryWard 23 to 5. The setback ond. | first win for the dairymen. and Twenty-first street. man, 53 year old catcher; Gamez, catcher; Hall, first; Crespo, second; Haley, third; Akers, shortstop; Mc- Nair and Dwight, outfielders; John- son, outfielder and hurler; Harrison, Morris, Torrienti, Smaulding, and Whitworth, pitchers. Crespo, Tor- J WE'LL BEAR You out, ARTER Vou TELL GUS THAT LINE! HERE'S SIGNS AROUND HERE, SAVING “To @ REPLACE. “TH” DIVOTS § we ~A GUY WOULD HAVE To FoLLow You ARGUAD SETTING MAN-HoLe COVERS OVER “TH” QUES You DIG! “ALAS wien Meee a “SEC, DAN: wLA AM‘ A. ? pret DOESNT « KNOW oP MIS OWN ; STRENGTH { ~ VERILY! fav EGAD ~~ You CAN WELL FANCY WHAT WOULD HAVE HAPPENED “he tHE BALL, HAD I dit crs aw HMM Now IT wilt! HAVE “TeLL* Gus HAT I BROKE’ HIS CLUB DEFENDING MYSELF AGAIWST AN, ES INFURIATED BULL! Greensboro, N. C., and perhaps the major leagues today. It was James Lymperopoulos, crack third baseman on the University of Hast ‘a. Me. IRIE BROKE PAR, - oe oh ON THE CLUB= “01900 By mee Made of choice crops; La Palina ferent, milder, Broadcasting System, ot 9:30 E.D.T. FONT let another day go by without smoking a La Palina. lected from the world’s best tobacco Java leaf—so rich, so costly, that it is called the “treasure of the tropics” « «« Try two or three and learn for yourself why La Palina is a dif- CONGRESS CIGAR COMPANY, INC., PHILADELPHIA, ba. Listen in on the Le Polina Program, Columbia | j | ‘TOLEDO BEATS MILWAUKEE Toledo, June 4.—(®)—Toledo took } Boseponed. game yesterday from Mil. | waukee 13 to 9. | Milwaukee 420 300 000— 9 16 ‘oledo . 300 140 32t—13 17 AVA WRAPPED that’s why it’s better! blended filler, se- is wrapped in pure better cigar... every Wednesday evening AMERICA’S LARGEST SELLING HIGH-GRADE CIGAR McKESSON-MIN! {| saturday of the transmississippi wom- | t.|in_@ 39 for the first nine to defeat 3] Okla., 6 up and 5 to play. {| With another miss, Ann Webster, | 9 :310} Outsider, Owned by Aga Khan, teams moved into a tie for second place in Monday night’s games of the secutive victory, drubbing Montgom- shoved | DURING GREAT RACE Montgomery Ward back to fourth |, place from its three way tie for sec- Gamble defeated Wills 32 to 2 and the Capital won from the Grand Pa- cific Eat Shop 10 to 5. In the fourth game the Northwestern Bell Tele- phone company received its fifth straight defeat at the hands of the | Bismarck Dairy, 25 to 12. It was the | This evening the Power and Light team will meet Toman’s Tailors, of the Mandan: league, on the Bis- marck diamond, on Broadway avenue Standings in the Bismarck league today. were: , Won Lost Pet. | Privately. i Power 5 0 1,000 Power and Light -.-. 900 | RAILWAY ENGINEER 18 Capital Laundry .... 4 1 ‘900 | THOUGHT PRIZE WINNER | Montgomery Ward. 3 2 .600|, Barnstaple, England, June 4—(#)— | Wills ...,...35 a 3 .400 | The holder of one of the Blenheim |G. P. Eat’ Shop . 1 4 ‘200 | tickets in the Calcutta sweepstakes— | Bismarck Dairy . oe | ‘200 | and joint winner of one of the three | Northwestern Bell .. 0 5 ‘900 | first prizes worth half a million dol- | Medalist Scores 37 in First Round; Oklahoman Is an Easy Winner | Tulsa, Okla.,. June 4.—(%)—Past | | Performances of Mrs. Dorothy Klotz \ Pardue, Sioux City, Ia., and Mrs. Hul- ; ; bert S. Clarke, Oklahoma City, Okia., today had established them as prime | favorites to meetin the finals here en's golf tournament. Yesterday Mrs. Pardue, medalist in | the qualifying rounds, with a 37,on the first nine, won from Mrs. W. D. Snyder, Kansas City, 5 and 4, in a first round match. Mrs. Clark turned | Mrs. O. T. Gilbertson, Muskogee, | Mrs. Pardue’s 37 was two strokes | better than women’s par. Today the Iowan meets a worthy | though youthful foe in the person of | 16-year-old Mary Elizabeth Ford, | Kansas City. Mrs. Clarke will clash | Leavenworth, Kas. | \ In British Classic| Indian Prince, First at Epsom Downs Epsom Downs, England, June ai (#)—Before a half million persons, in- cluding the king, queen, princess and many Americans, the Aga Khan, an | Indian prince living in France, won | the 151st running of the derby stakes today with his.colt, Blenheim, ridden by Jockey H. Wragg. Blenheim nosed past length ahead of sall’s Tliad, a comparative outsider, | with the favorite, Diolite, owned by Sir Hugo Hirst, two lengths behind. Bienheim’s time was 2 minutes, 38 1-5 | 1 the post one | Tatter- | seconds, Blenheim, ridden by H. Wragg, had been well regarded in the betting al- porn not one of the first three fa- MILLIONAIRES MADE Epsom, England, June 4.—(7)}—Mil- jionaires were made in the space of a few moments this afternoon through & worldswide network of sweepstakes. which all depended on the outcome of the derby. The famous Calcutta sweepstake alone was worth $4,500,000 to the holders of the lucky tickets which cost about $3 each. Altogether, more than $10,000,000 in sweepstakes alone hinged on the| derby. The Baltic exchange in Lon-; don sponsored a $400,000 sweepstake. | ‘The London stock echange sold derby | tickets aggregating $$300,000 and the, Liverpool cotton exchange had a! $250,000 sweepstake. Many other) smaller sweepstakes were operated | {lars each—is understood to be Percy | Hogg, Southern railway engineer. Hogg, however, shared his ticket with | five other railway men and one street ' sweeper. { From Hogg and his colleagues, now a 2 4 @ bit crestfallen, it was learned that at the last minute they had beer. prevailed upon to accept $15,000 for @ half interest in their ticket. Perhaps you don’t realize you can own such a fine suit for $35. Recently a cus- tomer of ours said, “Why, hadI known that my $85 would have purchased such a fine suit, I would have been in long ago.” Maybe that’s the case with lots of others. Well, gentlemen— we can’t show you the value on paper here, but we can show you the cloth- ing surprise of 1930 if you’ll come to see the suits. Others from $25 $50 ‘Bergeson’S Bismarck Race Meet June 18 - 19 - 20 - 21 INEAPOLIS DRUG CO. ‘ Minneapolis, Minn. SEALED IN CELLOPHANE 2 for 25¢ Other sizes: Weml5e 3 for 50c